but many of us use photoshop to PP
Not for me.. Because I can't afford Photoshop. I use Irfanview, GIMP and Photoshop Elements. ;p
but many of us use photoshop to PP
To those who are just pure ignorant about PP & photography
and still called yourself photographer, only because you owe a camera,
Before you continue to brag about photography, please do read, watch and learn more about the great masters of photography and their works. There is a lot of books in the library, a lot of film documentary in the internet [Youtube]. Many top photographers learned in college. Many are self-taught. And what is 'self-taught'? Taking thousand of photos isn't self-taught. Owning expensive camera equipments isn't self-taught. Learning a lot about your camera equipments doesn't make you a better photographer, But it Does make you a good Salesman.:bsmilie:
From street photographers to magazine/ product photographers to studio photographers to war photographers, there is no pro photographer in this world who don't do post proceed. When you tell me PP is not needed for a good photographer, it seems that you're trying to say your work are better than them because you don't post proceed.:think:
seriously curious to find out also :think:
If you attended a seminar recently held by National Geography @ Traders Hotel, you would hear loud and clear from one of the NG photographer that he DID NOT do any PP at all!
That is because his job require him to come up with photo as 'natural' as possible without any 'help' from PP.![]()
That's for his job... their requirements are no photoshop, not, you can use it but he chooses not to. It's different since he does not have a choice as opposed to an amatuer or other professionals.
I'm sure he/she also has access to every filter and equipment to allow them to get most of stuff done in camera.
If you attended a seminar recently held by National Geography @ Traders Hotel, you would hear loud and clear from one of the NG photographer that he DID NOT do any PP at all!
That is because his job require him to come up with photo as 'natural' as possible without any 'help' from PP.![]()
I'm sure he/she also has access to every filter and equipment to allow them to get most of stuff done in camera.
Well, there are always 2 sides of pros: pros that will not use PP and pros with so much PP... as you said, it depends on their job requirements.
what I m trying to say here is that those NG pros are really pros and they dont do PP and yet they can come out with superb photos...
but some of ppl in this forum think that ALL PROS do PP! which i think that statement not true!![]()
Seems like an exaggeration on his part, even if he does no post-processing himself, there are still editing departments involved in post-production and post-processing before an issue of the magazine goes to print.If you attended a seminar recently held by National Geography @ Traders Hotel, you would hear loud and clear from one of the NG photographer that he DID NOT do any PP at all!
That is because his job require him to come up with photo as 'natural' as possible without any 'help' from PP.![]()
National Geographic Magazine - Blogs said:
Film is dead, long live film
Posted On 2008.05.01
...
And finally, Fritz observes that digital requires time to handle the images after they are shot. “With film, the image is pretty much set when you shoot it. But with digital you have to deal with all this post-processing to get the images to look like you saw them.”
...
hehe relax bro.. no need to say until so sarcastic
i heard that statement from NG pros and shared it here...that's all!
i m not guru.. i m not pros... i m amateur.. i m newbie... and still lotsa things to learning... so of course i don't know the whole processes...
fyi, i m not against PP here... and as the matter of fact, i m also doing and learning PP wor...
peace!!![]()
If you attended a seminar recently held by National Geography @ Traders Hotel, you would hear loud and clear from one of the NG photographer that he DID NOT do any PP at all!
That is because his job require him to come up with photo as 'natural' as possible without any 'help' from PP.![]()
I wasn't being sarcastic. Really. I aszked a straightforward question.
I was just curious, because you spoke with such steadfast assurance and firm authority, and made such absolute statements that I was wondering if you had the benefit of working alongside many CS professionals.
Peace.![]()
"one of the NG photographers" said such a bold statement?
I assume he shoot in digital?
[he can't be shooting in film, or else, without post processing, his photo will still be in the film canister."]
I assume he shoot in RAW format?
and he just show or published his "raw" works, with no Post-Processing?
If this is true, i really need to see his work and know what camera he use.
Cos i will definitely buy his camera that shoot raw aka "digital negatives" that absolutely need no PP at all.
hehe relax bro.. no need to say until so sarcastic
i heard that statement from NG pros and shared it here...that's all!
i m not guru.. i m not pros... i m amateur.. i m newbie... and still lotsa things to learning... so of course i don't know the whole processes...
fyi, i m not against PP here... and as the matter of fact, i m also doing and learning PP wor...
peace!!![]()
ah yeah... he shoot in RAW... but he said he only convert it to JPEG without any touch up... he even said that he can show anyone who asking him to see the original file.... (btw, i m referring to NG portrait photographer, not the landscape one)
To be viewed or printed, the output from a camera's image sensor has to be processed, that is, converted to a photographic rendering of the scene, and then stored in a standard raster graphics format such as JPEG. This post processing, whether done in-camera or later in a raw file converter, involves a number of operations, typically including:
defective pixel removal replacing data in known bad locations with interpolations from nearby locations
demosaicing interpolating the partial raw data received from the color-filtered image sensor into a matrix of colored pixels.
noise reduction trading off detail for smoothness by removing small fluctuations
color translation converting from the color space defined by the spectral sensitivities of the image sensor to an internal working color space such as CIE XYZ
white balancing accounting for color temperature of the light that was used to take the photograph
color space transformation conversion from the internal working color space to the output color space (typically sRGB for JPEG)
bit-depth reduction and gamma compression for JPEG files, the 10 or more bits per pixel of color data stored in the raw file are nonlinearly reduced to 8 bits per pixel for a smaller file size.
compression for example JPEG compression
Cameras and image processing software may also perform additional processing to improve image quality, for example:
- removal of systematic noise bias frame subtraction and flat-field correction
- dark frame subtraction
- optical correction lens distortion correction, vignetting correction, and color fringing correction
- contrast enhancement
- increasing visual acuity by unsharp masking
- dynamic range compression lighten shadow regions without blowing out highlight regions
At any rate, even if we do not want to look at the files, a whole lot of pre-determined and/or adjustable parameters of post-processing already occurs the moment the shutter of a digital camera is depressed.